Hajj & Umra "..And Hajj (pilgrimmage to Makkah) to the House (Ka`abah) is a duty that mankind owes to Allah, those who can afford the expenes (for one's conveyance, provision, and residence)..."
Al-Quran:Surah 3 (Al-Imran); Verse 97
Hajj in Islam, the major pilgrimage to Mecca, a city located near the Red Sea coast in Saudi Arabia. The term hajj means “standing before a deity in a sacred place” or “voyage to a sacred place,” and Mecca is considered month the most scared Muslims city.
Only Muslims are permitted access to the region of the pilgrimage—that is, to the holy places of Mecca, Mina, Muzdalifa, and Arafat, all located in Saudi Arabia. During the hajj pilgrims must enter a state of ritual purity before they reach Mecca by performing ritual bathing and wearing the ihram, a white seamless shroud they keep for the rest of their lives as their burial garb. While in the state of ritual purity the pilgrim is denied various activities, such as sexual relations. After arriving in Mecca, the pilgrim carries out a set of rites as an individual. These rites culminate in the circling seven times, or tawaf, of the Kaaba (a rectangular building that contains the sacred Black Stone) and the quick, sevenfold crossing back and forth, or say, between two hills, Safa and Marwa. In addition to these rites, which make up the umra, the hajj includes certain other rituals performed by pilgrims collectively. Among these are the stopping on a hill in the valley of Arafat from noon until sunset, the symbolic stoning of the devil in the valley of Mina, and the sacrifice of sheep and goats. Once Muslims have carried out the hajj, they may use the title Hajji if male and Hajjah if female. During the first half of the 20th century about 30,000 Muslims annually made the pilgrimage to Mecca. Today, the number is closer to 2 million.
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